Newspaper Page Text
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he Jerald and ^dtfertisei[.
Newnan, Ga., Friday, September 16,1887.
THE THEORY OF PROTECTION
As Enforced by the Japanese Govern
ment and Practiced for Succes
sive Centuries.
Off titk Coast of Japan*, July 25.—
We left Yokohama yesterday on this
steamship for the Japanese island of
Ilokaido, formerly called Yezo, the
most northerly of the large islands of
Japan. We shall be due there in two
and a half days from Yokohama, stop
ping 12 hours at an intermediate point
to discharge there a part of our cargo
of English merchandise and Japanese
products. Japan is quite largely in the
steamboat business. Her steamers are
all English built and good, and officer
ed mainly by Englishmen or other for
eigners. There is room on this boat
for 33 iirst cabin passengers, but my
party of two comprises the first cabin
passenger list for this voyage. There
are 20 in the second cabin and 50 in the
steerage. Only princes, nabobs and
foreigners travel first-class here. All
others are too poor to pay the high
rates. Hokaido is the country of the
Arnos, a race of barbarians, supposed
by some to have been the ancestors of
the present Japanese, but away back
thousands of years. I see so much of
Ireland in the faces of the Japanese
that I have little or no doubt of the
Celtic origin of the race, and that the
original stock came from Central Asia,
from which country the Celtic colonies
of France came and afterward emigrated
from France to Ireland, and are now
the dark-haired Irish. It certainly is
no discredit to be the nephews and
grand-nephews of the early Japanese,
because they combined education with
personal prowess, and no doubt were
one of the most advanced races in civil
ization and education thousands of
years ago, and they took all possible
measures to prevent contamination by
intercourse with the less advanced races
or peoples of Asia, even to the preven
tion of foreign commerce. They
thought well of themselves. We have
been six weeks hard at work traveling
in the interior of Central Japan, mostly
by man power. Railroads have taken
us to some of tiie more distant parts of
the territory in which we have pros
pected, but the jinrik-sha, drawn by
two men, or the “k;t-go” or chair car
ried by four men, has been our means
of locomotion, mainly when not on
foot. I have gathered all the informa
tion I could from government statistics
and otherwise, and I am of the opinion
that there are few if any countries with
more abundant natural resources in
proportion to area, than Japan has.
As I have already written to you in a
previous letter, the interior is well sup
plied with mountains and intervening
valleys. The moutainsare well stocked
with minerals, and the coal supply of
excellent quality already discovered is
estimated to be equal to England’s an
nual output for a thousand years. Cof
fee is largely exported to India and to
Europe. The mountains are mostly
covered with forests up to the height
where trees refuse to grow, affording
abundance of lumber.
Streams and rivers course down the
mountain sides and through the valleys,
affording any quantity of unused water
power, abundancetof water for irrigat
ing the immense area of rice fields, and
are well stocked with fish. The valleys
among the mountains and the wide
stretches of plains are in the highest
state of cultivation, and are far supe
rior in richness of soil and abundance
of crops to the plains and valleys of
any country I have ever visited. The
climate is as varied as that from Con
necticut to Southern Florida, with rains
among the mountains almost daily in
the spring and early summer. Almost
every vegetable and fruit and berry
raised between the equator and the
poles grows abundantly here. Japan
must have been the Garden of Eden,
with a beauty of scenery and fertility
of soil never described. It is no won
der that a brave, civilized and educated
race, having secured such a country,
were desirous of excluding all others,
even to the extent of non-intercourse
with any other nation, and the exclu
sion of all foreign goods and all foreign
er's. It was a self-supporting country,
raising and producing within itself
everything necessary for human life
and luxury, surrounded by, and exist
ing under, the very best possible condi
tions for a favorable result of the trial
of the present American system of ex
clusion of foreign products “for the
protection of Jionie labor.” The sys
tem has been tried here for hundreds
of years, and according to the promises
of the protectionists here and in the
United States the “protection to home
labor” should have made every work
ingman, mechanic, and every other
worker for wages, prosperous and rich.
Wages should have been high, and
property distributed with an approach
to equality.
But instead of high wages, comforta- i
ble living and property somewhat in i
the hands of the working classes, the
result of the practice of the protection
and prohibition theory has been quite
different from what American protec
tionists promise. The laiid&Tfi Japan
became possessed almost entirely by >
an aristocracy of wealth who gained i
political power, who not only ruled the
people but finally entirely controlled
the emperor or Mikado. They and
fheir adherents became the ownenjand
operators of all mines and forests, and
by excessive rents of land and tariffs
cm mining, became possessed of most
of the capital of the country. Up to
within thirty years this governing aris
tocracy had been favored by an army
of nearly 300,000 priests who collected
what they could from the people and
the remainder necessary for their com
fortable support was contributed ’ by
the governing aristocracy.
No foreign goods or machinery or
material could be imported, no foreign
workingmen and mechanics were al
lowed to own land. What a happy con
dition of protection to home labor ! All
the trades had their unions or societies,
and there was no mercy in the enforce
ment of their rules, and in the secret
punishment of offending members, and
outsiders and scabs. But pupulation
increased, and workingmen, and me
chanics, in spite of all opposition, in
creased in number, and, with the in
creasing poverty of the people, the de
mand for the labor of mechanics and
workingmen decreased. The oppres
sion of the system of exclusion was
ended, so far as it can be in so short a
time, within the past twenty or twenty-
five years, in part by a forcible opening
of the ports of the country to commerce
by foreign naval powers, and in part by
a civil war, in which the old protection
aristocracy was. driven from power by
the Mikado, supported by reform
statesmen, who favored freedom of
trade.
Japan has now quite a respectable
foreign conunerce, its exports and im
ports paying only 5 per cent, duty for
the support of the government. The
production and manufacture of goods
for export has greatly increased em
ployment, and wages are higher and
more regular than before, although it
will take a hundred years to undo the
wrongs done bj the old system. .
The foreign goods imported are paid
for by the increase of manufactures
exported, and have added much to the
well-being of the people. Japan and
its people are improving under the new
life, but the effects of the old exclusive
ness will last for a long time.
The young men of ability and educa
tion are setting themselves at work,
leading the new life of the people.
Many have been sent to foreign schools
and colleges, and have returned to be
come civil engineers, able professional
men, teachers, etc. A large number of
new corporations have been formed to
take part in the.improvement of the
countiy. New railroads are being built
and those already built extended. But
there are many unfortunate legacies of
the old protectionists still standing in
the way. The workingmen and me
chanics do not knowhow to use modern
tools, and accomplish but little with
the old. Machines can be but little
used by the present race. With the
old wages and the little employment
under the old system, the working peo
ple and mechanics and small farmers
and farm laborers, and all wage earn
ers, learned to' have almost no wants
beyond the mere necessities for exist
ence, and while the worker’s wants are
so few he will earn but little.
When the new system of substantial
ly free trade was entered upon here a
few years ago, the population of Japan
was about 33,000,000. I suppose that
30,000,000 of them, at that time, had
never had a leather shoe on their feet;
nothing for shoes but pieces of boards
fastened under the feet. They had
never had a hat on their heads except
the barbarian sun and rain matting hat.
A large part of the males had never
wom*any other clothing in summer
than a piece of cloth 0 inches wide,
twisted and tied around the loins, pass
ed underneath and tied in front, and
not much more in winter. Mechanics
on buildings and in workshops open to
the street, and in the street, are often
clothed in that way, many of them lat
terly wearing some thin covering to
their legs. I suppose nearly all of the
thirty millions had never eaten from a
plate, had never seen a fork, never sat
in a chair, never saw a bedstead, nor
mattress, nor feather bed, nor other
pillow than a block of wood. Almost all
never tasted meat, never smelled coffee
nor slept on a sheet. They lived in
lints and hovels no better than the
poorest of I reland and generally not so
good. Five dollars will buy the house- '
keeping effects of a workingman’s fam
ily. Still they were somewhat educat-1
ed and allowed to read protection liter
ature. Nothing was allowed to be
printed or said against the policy of the j
raid’s, and the people believed they i
were the favored people of the earth, i
and blessed their rulers for excluding i
foreigners and foreign goods. The gov-,
eminent was an absolute oligarchy, rul-;
mg emperor and people with an intoler- i
ant and bloody hand m the interests of ;
wealth and monopoly. All the promi-!
nent families were trained to arms, and |
internecine war was the ambition of
the prominent and able young men. |
Twenty-five years of almost absolute
free trade has changed the whole drift
of the nation to the arts of peaee, and
foreign commerce has increased the vol
ume of the industries to a great extent.
Of course the employers begin to grum
ble at the increasing wages, but they
must remember that wages will always
increase with increasing business, and
they must keep up the amount of their
gains by doing a larger business at a
smaller percentage of profit.
J. B. Sargent.
was appreciated, but within the Terri
tory the great majority of subscribers
ordered the paper to be sent to them
and their friends, and then refused to
pay for it.
G. P. Wright, of Baltimore, lias been
the father of twenty-eight children,
twenty-three of whom are living. The
youngest child is four weeks old.
Give Them a Chance.
That is to say, your lungs. Also all
your breathing machinery. Very won
derful machinery it is. "Not only the
larger air-passages, but the thousands
of little tubes and cavities leading from
them.
When these are clogged and choked
w\th matter which ought not to be
there, your lungs cannot half do their
work. And what they do, they cannot
do well.
Call it cold, cough, croup, pneumonia,
catarrh, consumption or any of the fam
ily of throat and nose and head and
lung obstructionSj all are bad. All
ougnt to be got nd of. There isJust
one sure way to get rid of them. That
is to take Boschee’s German Syrup,
which any druggist "will sell you at 75
cents a bottle. Even if everything else
has failed, you may depend upon this
for certain.
(geneial Directory.
MANUFACTURERS.
The R. D. Colic Manufacturing Compa
ny.—Established 1854; incorporated 1881.
Manufacture steam engines, boilers, saw
mills, corn-mills, power cotton presses, shaft
ing. mill gearing and castings of all kinds;
lumber, sash, doors, blinds and moulding;
house contractors and car-builders. Employ
125 hands In various departments. R. D.
Cole, S’, president; M. Cole, vice-president;
R. £>. Cole, Jr., superintendent; M. F.Cole,
secretary and treasurer.
Thk Willcoxon Manufacturing Com
pany.—(Mills located at Lodi, 6 miles west of
Newnan, on the S., <1. and N*. A R. R.) Or
ganized October 12th, 1868. Manufacture
yarns, knitting cotton, and carpet warp.
\ early consumption of cotton, 700 hales.
Average number of hands employed, 75.
H. J. Sargent, secretary and treasurer.
Thk Coweta fertilizer Company.—
Manufacture several brands of high-grade
commercial fertilizers. Capacity 100 tons per
dav. Employ 30 hands during working'sea-
■ion. H. C. Arnall, president; J. A. Hunter,
vice-president; W. J. Driskill. superinten
dent; H. C Fisher, secretary and treasurer;
Geo. I. Jones, general agent.
Furniture Factory.—Thompson Bros,
proprietors. Established 1S67. Manufacture
all kinds of house and kitchen furniture.
Employ from 8 to 12 hands
Cigar Factory.—M. Salblde, proprietor.
Manufactures all grades of cigars, employing
both domestic leaf and best clear Havana.
Wholesale and retail.
BANKS.
First National Bank.—Established 1871.
Capital stock, $50,000; surplus, $70,000. \V. B.
Berry, president; John D. Berry, vice-presi
dent; H.C. Fisher, cashier; P. B. Murphy,
assistant cashier.
Newnan National Bank —Organized in
1885. Cash capital, #50,000. Charles C. Parrott,
president: J. S. lligby, vice-president; R
\V. Andrews, cashier; John S. Hollinshead,
assistant cashier.
CHURCHES.
Baptist Church—Rev. J. H. Hall, D. D.,
Pastor, -'reaching every Sabbath at 10.30 a.
m.and7:30.o. in. Sunday School at 9 a. m.
Prayer Meet ng Wednesday night at 7:30
clock. Young Men’s Prayer Meeting every
Monday night.
Methodist Church—Rev. W. 11. Foote,
Pastor. Preaching every Sunday at 10:30 a.
tn. and 7:15 p. ni. Sunday School 9 a. m.
Class Meeting at 4 p. m. Ladies Prayer
Meeting every Monday afternoon at 4 o’clock.
Young Men’s' Prayer Meeting every Monday
night. Social Meeting every Wednesday
night at 7:30 o’clock.
The Woman’s Foreign Missionary Society
aieets on the first Monday afternoon in each
month at the church, at 4 o’clock.
Presbyterian Church—Rev. Jas. Stacy.
D. D., Pastor. Preaching on t he first and third
Sabbaths in each month at 11 a. m. and 7:30
p. m. Sunday School every Sunday at 9 a.
m. Prayer Meeting every Thursday night a'
*:30 o’clock. Communion quarterly.
Episcopal Church.—Rev. E. Dennison,
Rector. Second Sabbath in each month, at
10:30 a. m t
CIVIC SOCIETIES.
Newnan Lodge, No. 102. 1. O. O. F.—T. E.
Fell, N. G.; W. E. Avery, V. G.; E. S. Buc-
hannan, Kec. Sec’y; Y. H. Thomp-on, P. S.;
W. C. Snead, Treasurer. Meets every Friday
night.
Ruth Rebecca Lodge, No. 12.—Meets
every second and fourth Monday nights at
Odd'Fellows’ Hall. U. F. Milner, N. G.;
\V. E. Avery, Sec’y.
Orion Encampment, No. 3.—A. B. Cates,
C. P.; Y. H. Thompson, H. P.; R. F. Miluer,
Scribe.
Coweta Lodge, No. 60, F. & A. M.—Regular
Meetings 2nd end 4th Tuesday nights in each
month. G. L. Johnson, \V..M. W. A. Mitchell
Secretarv.
N ewnan Chapter, No. 34, H. A. M.—Regu
lar Meetings first Tuesday nights in each
month. R. W. Freeman, H. P. W.A. Mitch
ell, Secretary.
Hiram Council No. 18 R. & S. M.—Regu
lar meeting third Tuesday evening in each
month. Orlando McClendon, T. I. M.; R.
W. Freeman, Recorder.
A. J. Berk r Council, No. 758, R. A.—Reg
ular meetings second and fourth Monday
nights in each month. L. R. Ray, Regent:
Daniel Swint, Secretary.
Newnan Lodge, No. 37, A. O.U.W.—Regu
lar meetings first and third Saturday nights
in each month. Geo. H. Carmical, M. W.;
Daniel «wint, Recorder.
Coweta County Btble Society.—Depos
itory at M. L. Carter A Co.’s.
(Sbucational.
1887. 1888.
PALMETTO HIGH SCHOOL,
(FOR MALES AND FEMALES,;
PALMETTO, GA.
JOHX E. PEXDEEGRAST, Prin.
FALL TERM WILL OPEN WEDNESDAY,
SEPTEMBER 7, 1887.
Healthy climate, pure water, good society,
cheap board and tuition, experienced teach
ers, and special care to pupils.
Tuition, per month $l.60tofi.00
Music, per month ------ 3.00
Board per, month ----- 8.00 to 10.00
d^^Send for Catalogue.
THE
36th SCHOLASTIC YEAR
—OF—
COLLEGE TEMPLE
WILL BEGIN
Monday, August 29th, 1887.
Having recorded our most successful year,
we preseat the claims of able instructors,
high scholarship, moderate rates and health
ful locality. For particulars, address,
M. P. KELLOGG, President,
Newnan ,Ga.
NEWNAN
MALE SEMINARY!
The Fall Session will begin
Monday, August 29th, 1887.
The school will be under
the supervision of Prof. A. S.
Jones, as Principal.
Board, $10 to $12 per
month. Tuition, $2 to $4.50
per month.
The patronage of the public
is solicited.
Chas. L. Moses, Proprietor.
THE GEORGIA
SCHOOL OF LANGUAGE,
SCIENCE AND ART.
Oneofthebest Businessand Normal Schools
South, and only one having a separate Female
Department, offers a select, un.-ectarian,Chris
tian home to young men and young ladies,
providing Tuition and Board, including
Washing, Fuel, Lights, etc., for only $12 per
month each! Penmanship, Book-keeping,
Shorthand, Type-writing and Music thor
oughly taught. Full Business, Normal, Col
legiate and Irregular courses of study. Su
perior Preparatory Department. Healthful
ness unsurpassed. Over 20J students the past
year. 16th year begins in Sept. Early appli
cation is necessary to secure a place. For cat
alogue address at. once,
TERRILL E. SIMMONS, Pres’t,
Noreross, Ga.
SOUTHERN
FEMALE COLLEGE.
College of Letters, Science and Art.
FACULTY OF SEVENTEEN;
SCHOLARSHIP HIGH.
Library, reading room, museum, mounted
telescope, apparatus, twenty-one pianos, com
plete appliances. Elocution ami Fine Art at
tractions. In Music the Miifl^i Cox direc
tors. vocalists from Paris unqJ^rlin, distin
guished pianist, and ladies’ oiMIstra. Board
and tuition, ?2u7. M cliool hegyreSept.28th.
MRS. I. F. COJIfllresident.
LdGrange, Ga.
WHERE
Do You Intend to Educate Your Daughter?
PUBLIC LIBRARY.
President—J. A. Hunter.
Vice President—Orlando McClendon.
Secretary—P. s. Willcoxon.
Treasurer—H. C. Fisher.
Directors—A. B. Cates, E. M. Cole, J. S
Anderson, A. C. Pease.
Librarian—Miss Julia Robinson.
The Library is open on Wednesday’s and Sat- j
urday’s from 9:3u a. m. to 12 m., and from 7:30 i
to 9:30 p. m.
CITY GOVERNMENT.
Mayor—W. B. Berry.
Mayor pro tf.ji-H. C. Arnall.
Adder men—J. J. Goodrum,H. C. Arnall,
K. W. Andrews. J. S. Powell.
Treasurer— R. W. Andrews.
City Clerk—L. S. Conyers.
City Attornets—Willcoxon & Wright.
Marshal—J. E. Robinson. Deputy—J. A.
Lee.
COUNTY OFFICERS.
Clerk Superior Court—Daniel Swint.
Ordinary—W. H. Persons. Sheriff—
George H. Carmical. Tax Receiver—J. J.
Farmer. Tax Collector—I. N. Farmer.
Treasurer—H. L. Jones. Surveyor—J.
B. Uoodwyn. Coroner—M. F. Duncan.
Lagrange "female college,
Lagrange, ga.
Forty-first Annual Session begins Septem
ber 21, 1887. Thorough Teachers. Approved
Methods, Practical Instruction. Full Litera
ry Curriculum. Superior advantages in In
strumental Music, Voice Culture, and Art.
Singing by note taught daily by a teacher of
acknowledged ability. Book-keeping, Elo
cution, Calisthenics, and Vocal Music taught
In regular course, free of charge. Ten thou
sand dollars now l>eing spent in improve
ments. Write for catalogue before deciding
where to send. RUFUS W. SMITH,
Euler B. Smith, Sec’y. | President.
COUNTY COURT.
J. W. Powell, Jndge; P. S. Whatley, Solici
tor. Monthly sessions—Third Monday In each
month. Quarterly sessions—Third Mondays
in January, April, July and October.
Fred H: Carruth, whose humor ha*
made the Dakota IteU quoted all over
the country, has had to suspend its
publication because it failed .to
Outside of Dakota, Tie reyV.
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS.
J A Hunter, Chairman; P O Collinsworth;
S D Simms, J 5 Sewell, W W Sasser, Com
missioners. R W Freeman, Clerk and At
torney. Meet first Wednesday in each month.
POST OFFICE.
Posthastes—J. B. MoCoUom.
Assistant Posts aster—A. H. Argo.
Office hotfrs from 7uMa.ns.toCp.in.
closure THE WATTS.
WALKER HIGH SCHOOL,
1887.
Tne Fall Session Begins August 30tn.
NORMAL FEATURE.
In addition to other advantages offered by
the school we mention that of Normal In
struction. Having prepared a great many for
teaching, this school offers special Induce
ments to Inexperienced, teachers, and those
expecting to follow that vocation.
DANIEL WALKER. Principal.
MRS. M J. NIMMONS, Assistant.
Newnan Ga., Aug. 5th-tf
SIMRIL
MANUFACTURING CO.,
NEWNAN, GA.
ROOFING, VALLEY, GUTTERS
[htof ail li—lwTi wire sirs willing
- i \
THOMPSON BR 1 -,.,.
’“(Ifir i\
DEALERS IX ' v * . J
AND UNDERTAKING GOOD,,
FURNITURE, ORGANS
NEWNAN, GA.
€R
BEDROOM, PARLOR AND DINING ROOM FURNITURE,,
WE HAVE FOLDING BEDS, EASY CHAIRS, OFFICE CHAIRS,!
ANYTHING YOU NEED.
ESTEY AND GEO. WOOD & CO.’S ORGANS-
1U
WOOD AND METALIC BURIAL CASES.
Odors filled at any time of day or night.
NEWNAN MARBLE AND GRANITE WORKS.
McNAMARA & BRO..
-DEALERS IN-
MARBLE AND GRANITE,
MONUMENTS, TOMBS AND HEADSTONES,
TABLETS, CURBING, ETC.
^SPECIAL DESIGNS, AND ESTIMATES FOR ANY DESIRED
WORK, FURNISHED ON APPLICATION.
NEWNAN, GEORGIA.
M c CLENDON & CO.,
PRINTERS, STATIONERS AND BINDERS,
(Up-stairs in “Herald & Advertiser” Building,) NEWNAN, GA..
W. E. AVERY
DKALKB IN
WATCHES,
CLOCKS,
JEWELRY,
SILVERWARE,
SPECTACLES,
GOLD PENS,
CHINA AND GLASSWARE,
MUSICAL MERCHANDISE,
. SINGER SEWING MACHINE,
NEEDLES AND OIL,
VIOLIN STRINGS,
BRIC-A-BRAC,
NOVELTIES
In house decoration, .etc.
WEDDING RINGS,
MEDALS, BADGES, PRESENTA
TION AND SPECIAL PIE
CES OF JEWELRY.
REPAIRING AND ENGRAVING.
Everything guaranteed as represented—
all work warranted.
W. E. AVERY, the Jeweler,
Newnan. Ga.
TO COUNTRY PRINTERS!
Complete Newspaper Outfit
For Sale!
Professional (£arbs.
PAYSON 8. WHATLEY,
Attorney at Laiv,
Newnan, Ga.
Will practice in all the Courts and give
prompt attention to all business placed in his
minds. Examination of titles, writing deeds,
mortgages, contracts, etc., will receive spe
cial attention. Office over Askew’s store.
L. M. FARMER,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
(Office over First National Bank.)
Will practice in all the Courts of Coweta
Circuit. All Justice Courts attended.
£fiF“Money to loan on real estate at 8 per
cent, per annum. Interest paid at end of the
year.
P. S. Willcoxon. VV. C. Wright.
WILLCOXON & WRIGHT,
Attorneys at Law,
. Newnan, Ga.
Will practice in all the Courts of the Dis
trict and Circuit. All Justice Courts atten
ded. Office in Willcoxon building, over E.
E. Summers’.
GEO. A. CARTER,
Attorney at Law,
Grantville, Ga.
Will practice in all the Courts of the Cir
cuit, and elsewhere by special agreement.
J. C. NEWMAN,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Georgia.
Will practice in the Superior and Justice
Courts of the county and circuit, and else
where by special agreement.
W. A. TURNER,
Attorney at Law,
Newnan, Ga.
Practices in all the State and Federal Courts.
Office No. 4 Opera House Building.
W. Y. ATKINSON,
Attorney at Law, k |
Newnan, Ga. I i
Will practice in all Courts of this and
adjoining counties and the Supreme Court.
J. S. POWELL,
Attorney at Law, I
Newnan, G j
Collections matle.
We have for sale a quantity of first-class
printing material, comprising the entire out
fit formerly used in printing the Newnan
Herald, as well as type, stones, chases, and
numerous other appurtenances belonging to
tiie old Herald Job office. Most of the mate
rial is in excellent condition and will be sold
from 5i) to 75 per cent, below foundry prices.
The following list contains the leading ar
ticles:
i Proutv Press, good as new.
250 lbs. Brevier.
150 lbs. Minion,
50 lbs. Pica.
50 lbs. English.
50 fonts Newspaper Display
Type.
25 select fonts Job Type.
8 fonts Combination Border,
Flourishes, etc.
Imposing Stones, Chases,
Type Stands and Racks.
The Proaty Press here offered is the same
upon which The Herald and Advertis
er has been printed for several months past
and is discarded only because the publishers
have found it necessary to procure a larger
press. It has been In use about fonr years,
and is capable of printing an 8-column paper.
Fall set of rollers and chases’go with the press.
Address NEWNAN PUBLISHING CO.
Newnan; Ga.
G. W. PEDDY, M. D..
Physician and Surgeon,
! Newnan, 3a /
(Office over W. E. Avery’s Jewelry Store. %
Offers his services to the people of Newnai’.
and surrounding country. All calls answered 1
promptly.
T. B. DAVIS, M. D.,
Physician and Surgeon,
Newnan
Offers his professional services to the
zens of Newnan and vicinity.
DR. THOMAS J. JONGS.
DR. THOS. COLE,
Dentist, H
„ Newnan, Ga.
Depot Street. 177 1
A. P. JONES.
J. E. TOOLF,
JONES & TOOLE, J]
CARRIAGE BUILDERS jf j
AND DEALERS IN
HARDWARE!;
LaGRANGE, ga.
Manufacture all kinds op
Carriages, Buggies, Carts aijl
Wagons. Repairing neat?
and promptly done at reaso
able prices. We sell the Per'